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Zelenskyy Not on Trump’s G7 Bilateral List, Official Says

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James Morrison
World - 14 Jun 2026
⚡ Quick Summary
  • Trump will not hold a bilateral meeting with Zelenskyy at the G7, despite attending a working session.
  • Russian territorial gains have stalled, per a U.S. official who wants the war to end quickly.
  • Ukraine struck Russian energy and military targets, including a sea terminal and oil station.
  • Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant reconnected to grid after a three-day outage, its 19th since the war began.

U.S. President Donald Trump will participate in a G7 working session with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in France on Tuesday but will not hold a bilateral meeting with him, a senior administration official said. The G7 summit is scheduled for June 15-17 in Evian, France. Trump plans bilateral meetings on the sidelines with French President Emmanuel Macron and leaders of Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and India, the official added. Speaking on condition of anonymity, one senior official said Russian territorial gains have “more or less stopped” and added: “We want the war to end as quickly as possible.”

A Ukrainian drone attack killed one person and injured three in Russia’s southern Krasnodar region on Saturday, local officials reported, part of Kyiv’s campaign against Russian military and energy infrastructure. Krasnodar Governor Veniamin Kondratyev said drone debris sparked a fire at a sea terminal.

Ukraine’s general staff did not comment on the Krasnodar strike but said its forces hit an oil preparation and pumping station overnight in Russia’s Volgograd region, as well as Russian-occupied areas in Ukraine’s Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia regions.

The attacks follow Zelenskyy’s statement that Ukrainian forces struck several infrastructure sites deep inside Russia, including a military factory he said supplied components for Russian drones and missiles.

Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant has been reconnected to the grid after repairs carried out under a localized ceasefire brokered by the International Atomic Energy Agency, the agency said. The outage, which lasted nearly three days, marked the 19th time the plant lost off-site power since the war began, following an attack on an electrical substation across the Dnipro River that disconnected the Ferosplavna backup power line late Wednesday. The facility relied on emergency diesel generators to cool its six shutdown reactors.

💡 Why This Matters

The omission of a bilateral meeting between Trump and Zelenskyy signals a possible shift in U.S. priorities under the new administration, especially given Trump’s stated desire to end the war quickly. This could mean less direct U.S. engagement with Ukraine and more focus on other Middle Eastern and Asian partners. For Kyiv, losing a one-on-one with the American president may undermine its ability to secure continued military aid and political backing at a critical moment when it is intensifying strikes inside Russia. The continued attacks on Russian infrastructure show that Ukraine is not relenting, but the diplomatic snub suggests Washington may be pressuring for a ceasefire on terms favorable to Moscow. Meanwhile, the repeated outages at Zaporizhzhia highlight the persistent nuclear safety threat, which could escalate into a major disaster if cooling systems fail.

🧭 Background

The G7 summit brings together leaders of major industrialized democracies. Ukraine has been seeking maximum Western support since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022. The Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, Europe’s largest, has been under Russian control since early in the war and frequently loses off-site power due to fighting. The IAEA has brokered localized ceasefires to allow repairs.

🔭 What’s Next

Watch for Trump’s bilateral meetings with Macron and Gulf/Indian leaders to signal whether the U.S. will try to broker a separate peace plan for Ukraine. If no bilateral materializes, European allies may increase their own diplomatic outreach to Kyiv. The power plant situation will remain fragile; any further outages could prompt an IAEA emergency session. Ukraine’s deep strikes into Russia may escalate in response to perceived U.S. disengagement.

📝 This article was rewritten with AI assistance based on content from The Guardian.
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